Tutorial quote: This guide is for setting up a Subversion (SVN) repository in Ubuntu. Subversion is a version control system which enables multiple users to modify the same document. Therefore, a tool such as Subversion comes in really handy when developing software on a team. Also, Subversion can be a life saver when you need to revert back to older versions of a document (e.g. you made some changes to your code and now everything is broken).

Tutorial quote: This howto outlines the process by which one can set up the Subversion version control system, and have it work in tandem with Trac, the project manager for software development projects, on a server running Ubuntu (or possibly Debian).

Tutorial quote: Subversion (svn) is an open-source version control system (VCS), used in the development of many software projects. This tutorial shows how to install Subversion on Debian Squeeze and how to configure it to allow access to a repository through different protocols: file://, http://, https://, svn://, and svn+ssh://.

Tutorial quote: Subversion is a free/open-source version control system. That is, Subversion manages files and directories over time. A tree of files is placed into a central repository. The repository is much like an ordinary file server, except that it remembers every change ever made to your files and directories. This allows you to recover older versions of your data, or examine the history of how your data changed. In this regard, many people think of a version control system as a sort of time machine.

Tutorial quote: This is the online home of Version Control with Subversion, a free book about Subversion, a new version control system designed to supplant CVS. As you may have guessed from the layout of this page, this book is published by O'Reilly Media.

Tutorial quote: This document explains in details the procedure to setup a subversion repository (with trac/viewvc) in Linux based environment. Depending on the needs, one of the following three schemes can be selected.